7.3 quake triggers Pacific tsunami on disaster anniversary

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SYDNEY: A powerful 7.3-magnitude earthquake struck off the western Pacific nation of Vanuatu yesterday, triggering a small tsunami exactly six years after giant waves killed 220,000 people around the Indian Ocean.

The Hawaii-based Pacific Tsunami Warning Centre said the shallow quake generated a tsunami, but it cancelled a regional warning after the wave measured only 15 centimetres higher than normal in Vanuatu.

“Sea level readings confirm that a tsunami was generated,” the centre said in its bulletin.

“This tsunami may have been destructive along coastlines of the region near the earthquake epicentre,” it said, but cancelled the warning when no destructive wave hit.

The quake struck at 12.16am yesterday, and the initial tsunami warning covered Vanuatu, Fiji and the French Pacific territory of New Caledonia.

There were no reports of damage or casualties.

Jackie Philip, a member of staff at the Melanesian Port Vila Hotel in the Vanuatu capital, said the hotel was busy with late-night Christmas revellers when the quake struck.

“Some of us ran outside and  watched the sea for a few minutes but nothing happened. There is no damage and no injuries,” he said, adding that no tsunami warning had been given on local radio.

A receptionist at Port Vila’s Grand Hotel called it a “small” earthquake, adding that calls to the meteorological office went unanswered.

Staff at the nearby Island Magic Hotel also said there had been no local tsunami warning.

“We haven’t had any notification of a tsunami,” a worker told AFP.

“We definitely felt the earthquake but we are notified if there’s actually a tsunami.”

Meteorological and disaster management officials were not available for comment when contacted by AFP.

The US Geological Survey said the quake was just 12.3 kilometres deep, and its epicentre was 145 kilometres west of Isangel on the island of Tanna — home to an active volcano — in the Vanuatu archipelago. — AFP